The dogs are probably more productive that the citizens.
Just sayin’ is all…
Regards,
Peter H.
John in Palm Springssays
But, but, but EVERYONE knows Republicans HATE cats!
Catseyesays
I grew up having to fight wild dogs, Not in Detroit, grab the snout and squeeze if they can’t breath thru their nose the can’t bite. Never got bit had the skin broke on my fingers tho. HT-The Three Stooges.
Charlessays
wow, that video is just so sad, so disturbing, that I’m at a loss for words.
Such facts as only 4 dog catchers to cover the entire city, the city pound stopped taking dogs because they haven’t paid their bill to haul away euthanized dogs, mail carriers carry pepper spray because of all the strays, and mail delivery has stopped in some areas because of too many dogs bites just leave one wondering how did it get so bad and the news media didn’t say a thing until now?! Did they think it would “magically” get better and they wouldn’t have to report it?
And the saddest part of all is all those poor dogs! Sorry, if I say f&ck the people they voted for what they got; but, the dogs are to be pitied.
Catseyesays
And for the record I thought the latest crisis was the large cat roaming around looked like an ocelot to me but some id’d it as a serval.
Ted B. (Charging Rhino)says
To the student of history, there’s the striking-analogy of modern Detroit to post-Imperial Rome.
The glory that was Rome” was the pilgrim and tourist’s marketing-phrase for over 1500-years. After several sacks by the barbarians and the loss of the Empire, Rome sat for 1-1/2 millennia as a giant semi-inhabited ruin. Like Detroit of today with it’s business core, GM and Quicken; the central core of Rome was the Pope, St Peters and the Papal Court around the Lateran and Quirinal. Depending on the Century, 10k-40k Romans lived amongst the ruins of a city of millions. In Coliseum was mined for it’s building-stone and marble during the Renaissance. The Grand Tour of the Enlightenment and of the Victorian Age presented Rome similar to how modern tourists visit the abandoned cities of the Yucatan, the Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, or Machu Pichu.
It wasn’t until the industrialization of modern Italy before and after WW1 that Rome even grew back to it’s Imperial boundaries.
The dogs are probably more productive that the citizens.
Just sayin’ is all…
Regards,
Peter H.
But, but, but EVERYONE knows Republicans HATE cats!
I grew up having to fight wild dogs, Not in Detroit, grab the snout and squeeze if they can’t breath thru their nose the can’t bite. Never got bit had the skin broke on my fingers tho. HT-The Three Stooges.
wow, that video is just so sad, so disturbing, that I’m at a loss for words.
Such facts as only 4 dog catchers to cover the entire city, the city pound stopped taking dogs because they haven’t paid their bill to haul away euthanized dogs, mail carriers carry pepper spray because of all the strays, and mail delivery has stopped in some areas because of too many dogs bites just leave one wondering how did it get so bad and the news media didn’t say a thing until now?! Did they think it would “magically” get better and they wouldn’t have to report it?
And the saddest part of all is all those poor dogs! Sorry, if I say f&ck the people they voted for what they got; but, the dogs are to be pitied.
And for the record I thought the latest crisis was the large cat roaming around looked like an ocelot to me but some id’d it as a serval.
To the student of history, there’s the striking-analogy of modern Detroit to post-Imperial Rome.
The glory that was Rome” was the pilgrim and tourist’s marketing-phrase for over 1500-years. After several sacks by the barbarians and the loss of the Empire, Rome sat for 1-1/2 millennia as a giant semi-inhabited ruin. Like Detroit of today with it’s business core, GM and Quicken; the central core of Rome was the Pope, St Peters and the Papal Court around the Lateran and Quirinal. Depending on the Century, 10k-40k Romans lived amongst the ruins of a city of millions. In Coliseum was mined for it’s building-stone and marble during the Renaissance. The Grand Tour of the Enlightenment and of the Victorian Age presented Rome similar to how modern tourists visit the abandoned cities of the Yucatan, the Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, or Machu Pichu.
It wasn’t until the industrialization of modern Italy before and after WW1 that Rome even grew back to it’s Imperial boundaries.